privacy
DESCRIPTION
How private are our details now? Does it matter? Presentation for 14 year olds asking them to think about witting and unwitting disclosure of personal detailsTRANSCRIPT
- 1. PRIVACY
2. In pairs
Work out a definition of the word
PRIVACY
that you think makes sense
Youve gotabout 7 minutes...
3. The United Nations says
Article 12 of the Universal Declaration
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his
privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his
honour and reputation Everyone has the right to the protection of
the law against such interference or attacks.
Article 16 of the Declaration of the Rights of the child
No child shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference
with his or her privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to
unlawful attacks on his or her honour and reputation.
4. BUT these are QUALIFIED rights
Interference with them is permissible only if what is done:
has its basis in law, and
is done to secure a permissible aim set out in the relevant
Article, for example for the prevention of crime, or for the
protection of public order or health, and
is necessary in a democratic society, which means it must fulfil a
pressing social need, pursue a legitimate aim and be proportionate
to the aims being pursued
A Guide to the Human Rights Act 1998: Third Edition
5. So what would you want to keep private?
Your..?
Your..?
Name?
Address?
Date of birth?
Number of siblings?
Favourite movies/food?
School?
Parents details?
Allergies and GP details?
Friends?
Qualifications?
Hobbies?
Phone records?
Text records?
Criminal record?
School history?
Pets?
Car details?
6. Does it matter if any of this is NOT private any more?
Your..?
Your..?
Name?
Address?
Date of birth?
Number of siblings?
Favourite movies/food?
School?
Parents details?
Allergies and GP details?
Friends?
Qualifications?
Hobbies?
Phone records?
Text records?
Criminal record?
School history?
Pets?
Car details?
7. WHY?
In pairs, see if you can come up with reasons for your answer use
the Internet to find examples to support your view for extra
credit...
Youve gotabout 10minutes...
8. Privacy leaks...
Facebook
YouTube
Twitter
Experion
CCTV
Loyalty cards
Cookies
Databases NHS, National Identity Card
9. Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
Allows the police, intelligence services, HM Revenue and Customs
(and several hundred more public bodies, including local
authorities and a wide range of regulators) to demand telephone,
internet and postal service providers to hand over detailed
communications records for individual users. This can include name
and address, phone calls made and received, source and destination
of emails, internet browsing information and mobile phone
positioning data that records user's location. These powers are
self-authorised by the body concerned, with no external or judicial
oversight.
10. Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
Enables the government to demand that someone hands over keys to
protected information; and makes it a criminal offence to refuse to
supply actual encrypted traffic or refuse to disclose an encryption
key.
Enables the government to force internet service providers to fit
equipment to facilitate surveillance.
Allows the government to demand an ISP provider provide secret
access to a customer's communication.
Makes provisions to establish an oversight regime, creates an
investigatory powers tribunal and appoints three
commissioners.
11. So by what rules should we live?
In fours...
Suggest the way we should work on the Internet, on our
phones...
What private things should we protect, or should we just be careful
to have nothing to hide?
Youve gotabout 10minutes...